A man walks on a snow-covered bridge in Shanghai, China, on Dec. 15. Eugene Hoshiko/AP

Ice covers the railings near the lighthouse tower behind the Summerfest grounds on Dec. 12, in Milwaukee. A powerful, gusty storm dumped mounds of snow across the upper Midwest, closing major highways in several states, canceling more than 1,600 flights in Chicago and collapsing the roof of the Minnesota Vikings' stadium. Kristyna Wentz-Graff/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel/AP

Blowing snow obscures a road in rural Lorain County near Grafton, Ohio, on Dec. 13. A storm that hit overnight with high winds and blowing snow caused problems with road and air travel and closed many schools across northern Ohio. Mark Duncan/AP

People play in the snow in Ajloun city, about 27 miles from Amman, Jordan, on Dec. 13. Muhammad Hamed/Reuters

A child throws snow as he sits with a sled on a snow hump in Lofer, Austria, on Dec.13. The weather forecast predicts some snowfall and cold temperatures for the next days. Kerstin Joensson/AP

A man walks through the snow-covered landscape in the Olympic park in Munich, southern Germany, after a snowfall on Dec. 13. Matthias Schrader/AP

Share this image:

A second lion was reportedly killed by a foreign tourist in Zimbabwe just two days after an American dentist killed the country's most famous lion, called Cecil. But contrary to many media reports, Cecil's brother Jericho remains alive and well.

ByMacDonald Dzirutwe, ReutersAugust 1, 2015

Andy Loveridge/Wildlife Conservation Research Unit via AP

The brother of Cecil, the lion killed in Zimbabwe by an American hunter last month, is not dead, a researcher monitoring the pride told Reuters, contradicting media reports that Jericho had been killed.